Once a recovery point is captured for a protected SQL or Exchange server, the application displays a corresponding color status indicator in the Recovery Points grid. This grid appears in the Recovery Points pane when viewing recovery points for a specific machine. The color that displays is based on the check settings for the protected machine and the success or failure of those checks, as described in the following tables.
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NOTE: For more information on viewing recovery points, see Viewing the recovery points page of a protected machine. |
The following table lists the status indicators that display for Exchange databases.
Status Color | Description |
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White | Indicates that an Exchange database is not detected within the recovery point, volume, or volume group. |
Yellow | Indicates that the Exchange database mountability checks have not yet been run. |
Red | Indicates that either the mountability or checksum checks failed on at least one database. |
Green | Indicates that the recovery point contains one or more database, and that mountability checks are enabled, and that mountability check passed or that the checksum check passed. |
The following table lists the status indicators that display for SQL databases.
Status Color | Description |
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White | Indicates that a SQL database is not detected within the recovery point, volume, or volume group. |
Yellow | SQL database was offline, indicating that attachability checks were not possible and have not been performed. |
Red | Indicates that the attachability check failed, or SQL database is offline. |
Green | Indicates that the attachability check passed. |
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NOTE: Recovery points that do not have an Exchange or SQL database associated with it appear with a white status indicator. In situations where both an Exchange and SQL database exists for the recovery point, the most severe status indicator displays for the recovery point. |
In Rapid Recovery, you can mount a recovery point from the Core Console to access stored data through a local file system.
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NOTE: To mount a Linux recovery point with the |
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NOTE: When mounting recovery points from data restored from a machine that has data deduplication enabled, you must also enable deduplication on the Core server. |
The Summary page appears for the selected protected machine.
Option | Description |
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Destination and other options Local folder |
Choose from one of the following options: Mount to the next available drive letter. This option will provide an alphabetic designation (for example, F:\) for the volume you want to mount, using the next available letter. This option is only accessible if you selected a single volume in step 5. Mount to a drive letter. This option assigns the alphabetic designation you select (for example, Z:\) for the volume you want to mount. The letter must not already be in use. This option is only accessible if you selected a single volume in step 5. Mount to a folder. Specify the path used to access the mounted recovery point. For example, select |
Mount type |
Specify the way to access data for the mounted recovery point:
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Create a Windows share for this mount |
Optionally, select this check box to specify if the mounted recovery point can be shared, and then set access rights to it, including the Share name and Allowed groups. |
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NOTE: If you want to copy directories or files from a mounted recovery point to another Windows machine, you can use Windows Explorer to copy them with default permissions or original file access permissions. For details, see Restoring a directory or file using Windows Explorer to Restoring a directory or file and preserving permissions using Windows Explorer. |
Complete the steps in this procedure to dismount recovery points that are mounted on the Core.
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NOTE: When dismounting a recovery point mounted remotely, the action is referred to as disconnecting. |
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NOTE: If toast alerts are enabled, you may see a message that the appropriate mount points are being dismounted. |
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NOTE: If toast alerts are enabled, you may see a message that the appropriate mount points are being dismounted. |
The recommended and supported method to mount and unmount recovery points from a protected Linux machine is to use the local_mount utility.
The procedures referenced above specifically address using local_mount to mount and unmount Linux recovery points.
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NOTE: For managing Linux recovery points from the Rapid Recovery Core Console, see Managing snapshots and recovery points. |
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